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The importance of worldviews on women’s leadership to HRD

The importance of worldviews on women’s leadership to HRD
The importance of worldviews on women’s leadership to HRD

The Problem

The challenges faced by women in leadership, to some extent, appear throughout the world, across country-based cultures and religious traditions, even where there has been progress. The eight articles that comprise this issue raise questions related to women in leadership, providing a cross-case opportunity to explore what might yet be needed to empower women in leadership roles in business, politics, non-government organizations, academia, and the family.


The Solution

There are no easy solutions that emerge from our analysis across these eight articles. Worldviews influence women in leadership; from these articles, we understand the influences better and glimpse opportunities for improving the status of women leaders, globally, as well as within specific countries and religious traditions. We also suggest perspectives that might lead to valuable studies that will help/pave the way for developing future women leaders.


The Stakeholders

HR scholars and practitioners, potential and current women leaders, and those working with or accommodating women leaders in multiple contexts are the main stakeholders of this issue. Furthermore, because this is the concluding article to this issue, all the stakeholders listed with each article will be interested in our overall conclusions to this issue.

260-270
McLean, Gary N.
f5442ff5-444b-43c9-895b-0ae23aa4d5ef
Beigi, Mina
2986037e-5bb3-4ec0-be55-bf291ac17e24
McLean, Gary N.
f5442ff5-444b-43c9-895b-0ae23aa4d5ef
Beigi, Mina
2986037e-5bb3-4ec0-be55-bf291ac17e24

McLean, Gary N. and Beigi, Mina (2016) The importance of worldviews on women’s leadership to HRD. Advances in Developing Human Resources, 18 (2), 260-270. (doi:10.1177/1523422316641419).

Record type: Article

Abstract


The Problem

The challenges faced by women in leadership, to some extent, appear throughout the world, across country-based cultures and religious traditions, even where there has been progress. The eight articles that comprise this issue raise questions related to women in leadership, providing a cross-case opportunity to explore what might yet be needed to empower women in leadership roles in business, politics, non-government organizations, academia, and the family.


The Solution

There are no easy solutions that emerge from our analysis across these eight articles. Worldviews influence women in leadership; from these articles, we understand the influences better and glimpse opportunities for improving the status of women leaders, globally, as well as within specific countries and religious traditions. We also suggest perspectives that might lead to valuable studies that will help/pave the way for developing future women leaders.


The Stakeholders

HR scholars and practitioners, potential and current women leaders, and those working with or accommodating women leaders in multiple contexts are the main stakeholders of this issue. Furthermore, because this is the concluding article to this issue, all the stakeholders listed with each article will be interested in our overall conclusions to this issue.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 4 April 2016
Published date: May 2016

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 413194
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/413194
PURE UUID: e86f5341-52a2-430b-a1e6-ddc89424139c
ORCID for Mina Beigi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4866-7205

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 17 Aug 2017 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:31

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Contributors

Author: Gary N. McLean
Author: Mina Beigi ORCID iD

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